ff b aee c o.
Dauvit Alexander/Flickr
The time may be ripe for a South African raid on the UK’s discounted high street.
Shutterstock/studio0411
Equality is coming to the British Armed Forces, whether it’s wanted or not.
Do the Chancellor’s sums add up.
Sean McGee Hicks/Flickr
Rates of corporation tax have a very human impact.
Ghosts in the machine: housing and commercial property are battling headwinds.
David de la Mano/Flickr
Brexit worries have shaken the professional end of the sector, but Britain’s troubles have run far deeper for far longer.
A proposed new law is set to allow surrogate parents in South Africa to also take leave to care for their babies.
shutterstock
South African law requires surrogate mothers to hand infants to their legal parents without undue delay. But it doesn’t provide leave for these parents to care for their infants. That is set to change.
We’re used to abundance, but Brexit makes it all seem more fragile.
Eric/Flickr
We only have enough food stocks to last 3-5 days, and Brexit has suddenly made things seem worryingly fragile.
Tapa the morning.
Tonello Photography
Madrid may hold the key to Scotland’s future – for several reasons.
Uh-oh.
Phoenixman
If Brexiters thought that making new international tariff deals and joining the WTO would be a cakewalk, they’re in for a shock.
Aftershocks from the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union will be felt in Australian research.
Shutterstock/argus
Australian researchers engage in collaborative programs with both the UK and the rest of Europe. So what does Brexit mean for those collaborations?
Africa will feel the loss of the EU’s influence in its relationship with Britain.
Shutterstock
Britain’s decision to leave the EU will fundamentally affect Africa’s relationship with UK in a way that will be damaging to all.
South African President Jacob Zuma arrives at a European Union-South Africa summit in 2012.
Reuters/Yves Herman
It’s unclear what South Africa’s attitude will be to negotiating new deals with the UK and the EU. In the past seven years it has lost its appetite for trade deals, particularly with the developed world.
Boris Johnson led the Leave campaign. Now Brexit might have positive implications for UK trade.
Nigel Roddis/AAP
Australia could stand to benefit from trade with a newly liberated UK.
A voting station in London where the remain vote was strong. Only the London region, Scotland and Northern Island voted to remain.
Neil Hall/Reuters
The London area has been the U.K.’s political and economic power center, causing the social inequality with other parts of England and Wales that fueled the leave campaign.
Now what are you going to do with it?
Neil Hall/Reuters
UKIP’s Nigel Farage and others blamed immigration for the desire to “leave.” But the real subject of the referendum was a dismal economy that stopped working for most Brits.
Is Britain downsizing?
PA
The United Kingdom is looking pretty divided right now.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
June 24, 2016
Andrew S. Roe-Crines , University of Liverpool ; Andre Spicer , City, University of London ; Bill Durodie , University of Bath ; David Spencer , University of Leeds ; Paul Cairney , University of Stirling ; Peter Taylor-Gooby , University of Kent ; Richard Murphy , City, University of London ; Roger Awan-Scully , Cardiff University ; Simon Usherwood , University of Surrey , and Swati Dhingra , London School of Economics and Political Science
The UK has delivered a shock to the world’s largest economic and political group.
Fighting it out.
Stefan Rousseau / PA Wire
Britain will continue negotiating the terms of its relationship with Europe, whatever the outcome of its referendum.
An uncertain future…
Union Jack via www.shutterstock.com
The UK’s regions – England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – hold very different views about whether to remain in the EU, which means the country might not survive a Brexit in its current form.
Bold claims from adland have left us inured to deception.
York Mix/Flickr
Advertising complaints hit 37,000 in the UK last year, but companies keep chancing their arm.
William Sadler II’s Battle of Waterloo.
British history is deeply connected to Europe and whatever the result of its referendum, this will continue.